Get used to it. The modern day solution for everything right now is to throw AI at it.
Hmmm... I need to measure this piece of wood for cutting, let me take a picture of it and see what the ai says its measurement is instead of using a measuring tape because it is faster to use the AI.
Begin reimplementing a subleq/muxleq VM with GPU primitive commands:
https://github.com/howerj/muxleq (it has both, muxleq (multiplexed subleq, which is the same but mux'ing instructions being much faster) and subleq. As you can see the implementation it's trivial. Once it's compiled, you can run eforth, altough
I run a tweked one with floats and some beter commands, edit muxleq.fth, set the float to 1 in that file with this example:
1 constant opt.float
The same with the classic do..loop structure from Forth, which is not
enabled by default, just the weird for..next one from EForth:
1 constant opt.control
and recompile:
./muxleq ./muxleq.dec < muxleq.fth > new.dec
run:
./muxleq new.dec
Once you have a new.dec image, you can just use that from now on.
I imagine a carefully crafted set of programming primitives used to build up the abstraction of a CPU…
“Every ALU operation is a trained neural network.”
Oh… oh. Fun. Just not the type of “interesting” I was hoping for.